Germany has become a major country of immigration, as well as a research powerhouse in Europe. As Germany spends a higher fraction of its GDP on research and development than most countries with advanced economies, there is an expectation that Germany should be able to attract and retain international scholars who have high citation performance. Using an exhaustive set of over eight million Scopus publications, we analyze the trends in international migration to and from Germany among published researchers over the past 24 years. We assess changes in institutional affiliations for over one million researchers who have published with a German affiliation address at some point during the 1996-2020 period. We show that while Germany has been highly integrated into the global movement of researchers, with particularly strong ties to the US, the UK, and Switzerland, the country has been sending more published researchers abroad than it has attracted. While the balance has been largely negative over time, analyses disaggregated by gender, citation performance, and field of research show that compositional differences in migrant flows may help to alleviate persistent gender inequalities in selected fields.
翻译:德国已成为主要的移民国家,也是欧洲的一个研究强国。德国的研发支出占GDP的比重高于大多数发达经济体国家,因此人们期望德国能够吸引和留住具有高引力表现的国际学者。我们利用一套800万册Scopus出版物的详尽无遗地分析过去24年出版的研究人员中来自和来自德国的国际移徙趋势。我们评估了1996-2020年期间某个时候与德国联系的100多万研究人员的机构联系变化。我们表明,德国高度融入全球研究人员的流动,与美国、英国和瑞士的关系尤其密切,但德国向国外派遣的已出版的研究人员比吸引的要多。尽管随着时间的推移,这种平衡在很大程度上是负面的,但按性别、引力表现和研究领域分列的分析表明,移民流动的构成差异可能有助于缓解某些领域持续存在的性别不平等。